Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Aug 122009

NEW RESOURCES: A Report on Mandatory Death Sentences

The Death Penalty Project of London recent­ly pub­lished A Penalty Without Legitimacy: The Mandatory Death Penalty In Trinidad And Tobago (2009), a col­lec­tion of papers pre­sent­ed at a con­fer­ence in Trinidad & Tobago in March 2009. The papers include a study of opin­ions of judges, pros­e­cu­tors, and coun­sel on the use of the manda­to­ry death penal­ty in Trinidad and Tobago and ways to bring its prac­tice in line with oth­er coun­tries that have retained the death penal­ty. The report also includes…

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News 

Aug 112009

Gov. Perdue Signs North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act – NAACP Commends Passage

Governor Beverly Purdue of North Carolina signed the state’s Racial Justice Act into law on August 11, con­clud­ing a long peri­od of leg­isla­tive action sur­round­ing this death penal­ty statute. Gov. Purdue said in a news release, I have always been a sup­port­er of death penal­ty, but I have always believed it must be car­ried out fair­ly. The Racial Justice Act ensures that when North Carolina hands down our state’s harsh­est pun­ish­ment to our most heinous criminals…

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News 

Aug 102009

BOOKS: The Crying Tree”

The Crying Tree is a new nov­el by Naseem Rakha that rais­es the real-life ques­tion: Could you for­give the man who mur­dered your son? Rakha is an award-win­n­ing broad­cast jour­nal­ist whose work has been heard on NPR’s All Things Considered” and Morning Edition.” The sto­ry of her nov­el is told through the lives of a moth­er whose son was mur­dered and the super­in­ten­dent of a state pen­i­ten­tiary where the defen­dan­t’s exe­cu­tion is to take place. Sister Helen Prejean, author…

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News 

Aug 072009

Conditional Pardons Granted for Three of Norfolk Four

On August 6, Virginia Governor Tim Kaine held a press con­fer­ence announc­ing con­di­tion­al par­dons to three of the four sailors known as the Norfolk Four. Danial Williams, Joseph Dick, Eric Williams and Derek Tic were were con­vict­ed of the 1997 rape and mur­der of Michelle Moore-Bosko. The par­doned defen­dants, Danial Williams, Dick and Tic were orig­i­nal­ly giv­en life sen­tences, while Eric Williams was sen­tenced to eight and a half years in prison and had been…

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News 

Aug 062009

Racial Justice Act passes in North Carolina

On August 5, the North Carolina sen­ate passed a bill allow­ing pre-tri­al defen­dants and death-row inmates to chal­lenge the death penal­ty process through the use of sta­tis­ti­cal stud­ies. The Racial Justice Act allows a defen­dant fac­ing a cap­i­tal tri­al or an inmate sen­tenced to death to use evi­dence show­ing a pat­tern of racial dis­par­i­ty as a way of chal­leng­ing racial injus­tice in the death penal­ty. Prosecutors would then have the oppor­tu­ni­ty to rebut the claim…

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News 

Aug 052009

Murders Drop in New Jersey Following Moratorium and Abolition of Death Penalty

The num­ber of mur­ders in New Jersey declined 24% in the first six months of 2009 com­pared to the same peri­od last year. Murders declined in 2008, the year after the state abol­ished the death penal­ty, mark­ing the first time since 1999 that New Jersey has seen a drop in mur­ders for two con­sec­u­tive years. Murders dropped 11% in 2007, the year fol­low­ing a state-imposed mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions, which was insti­tut­ed in 2006. Governor Jon Corzine, who signed the…

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News 

Aug 032009

INTERNATIONAL-CLEMENCY: Kenya Commutes 4,000 Death Sentences

The President of Kenya, Mwai Kibaki, announced on August 3 that he is com­mut­ing the death sen­tences of every­one on the coun­try’s death row to life impris­on­ment. The President cit­ed the wait to face exe­cu­tion of the more than 4,000 death row inmates as undue men­tal anguish and suf­fer­ing.” No one has been exe­cut­ed in Kenya for 22 years. The President said he was fol­low­ing the advice of a con­sti­tu­tion­al com­mit­tee. Mr. Kibaki has direct­ed gov­ern­ment officials to…

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News 

Jul 312009

RACE: Research Experts Say Racial Bias Still Exists in Death Penalty

Renowned researchers David Baldus, Professor of Law at the University of Iowa, and George Woodworth, a fel­low of the American Statistical Association, recent­ly wrote about the ongo­ing prob­lem of racial dis­par­i­ties in cap­i­tal cas­es. Professors Baldus and Woodworth were respon­si­ble for the acclaimed study on race and the death penal­ty in Georgia that was brought before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1987 in McCleskey v. Kemp. In response to claims that…

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News 

Jul 302009

NEW RESOURCES: Documentary tells story of innocent man who spent 18 years on death row

In 1984, Juan Melendez was sent to Florida’s death row for the mur­der of Delbert Baker even though no phys­i­cal evi­dence linked him to the crime. In 2002, he was released with all charges vacat­ed after it was found that pros­e­cu­tors had with­held crit­i­cal evi­dence in the case. He became the 99th per­son exon­er­at­ed in the United States since 1976, and the 20th from Florida. As of today, 135 peo­ple have been exon­er­at­ed. Juan Melendez — 6446

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